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The Sinner King: Book of Fire Page 3
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"That's correct," said Jillian.
"Then what were you doing in District 2?"
Jillian froze. She had no good excuse.
"Have you eaten from the tree that I commanded you not to eat from?"
"I'm sorry?" said Jillian with confusion.
"It's a quote from Genesis 3:11."
"I don't know what that is."
"I know you don't," said Jonas. "Genesis is an ancient book. It tells the story of a woman who was warned not to do something under any circumstance, but her curiosity had taken control and she couldn't help herself. This woman then tried to hide her disobedience and was overwhelmed with guilt. ‘Then the Lord God said to the woman: What is this you have done?'"
"I haven't done anything!" shouted Jillian with a panic.
"Dear woman, who said that you did?"
She was visibly trembling now. "What do you want with me?"
"I simply want to know why you were in District 2 this morning."
"Is it a crime to be in District 2?"
"Certainly not," said Jonas. "But it is a crime to pass sensitive information from your patient to another."
"I did no such thing!" protested Jillian.
"And yet you are in District 2 this morning."
"I . . . I was . . ." Jillian wanted to come up with an excuse but nothing came to her. Then a voice, unlike her own, entered her mind. Calm down, the voice said. You're not in trouble. Just tell him what he wants to know. But Jillian knew she was in trouble. She knew Jonas was right, and worst of all, she knew he knew. Everything will be okay if you tell him what you have done. "I haven't done anything," she said feebly.
"Let me tell you another story," said Jonas. "There is another ancient book called Revelations. You probably haven't heard of this one either. It's a macabre tale about the opening of the Seven Seals—each unleashing doom onto our world. The first releases a white horseman with the power of conquest. The second releases a fiery red horseman that brings war to the land. The third releases a black horseman who has the power to judge man. The fourth seal releases a pale horseman that has the power to bring death to all living flesh and blood." Jonas readjusted his coat collar before speaking again. "The fifth seal unleashes the souls of the fallen so that they can walk the earth again. And the sixth seal . . . the sixth seal is the most frightening of them all." He then began quoting the book: "I watched as he opened the sixth seal. There was a great earthquake. The sun turned black like sackcloth made of goat hair, the moon turned blood red, and the stars in the sky fell to the earth, as late figs drop from a fig tree when shaken by a strong wind. The sky receded like a scroll rolling up, and every mountain and island was removed from its place. Then the kings of the earth, the princes, the generals, the rich, the mighty, and every slave and every free man hid in caves and among the rocks and the mountains."
Jillian could no longer feel her legs. They had grown numb with fear. "Why are you telling me this?"
"Because," said Jonas, "I want you to understand the consequences of your actions."
It's not too late, the voice in Jillian's head told her. Tell him what you did. "I can't!"
Jonas then rose to his feet for the first time and arched his body over her. Jillian frantically looked around for a way out. She looked back to the doors she came through earlier. In the door window she saw the two security force agents watching.
"Tell me what you did Jillian," ordered Jonas, his voice had grown drastically deeper. "Confess your sin."
Jillian fell back against the encompassing window and, for a brief moment, felt as if she was tumbling from the railway car and through the two hundred feet of air below. "I can't!" she shouted again as she slid her body away from Jonas. "I promised him!"
"What did you promise Jillian!?"
She continued to slide her body to the end of the car, which was also the end of the railway. She reached for the door but saw that there was nowhere else to go. It was then, that the stench of decomposition realigned her senses. For that brief moment, Jillian became acutely aware of the overpowering smell.
"What did you promise!?" bellowed Jonas.
Tell him, the voice commanded. Tell him what you did. Tell him why you are here. Release it!
Jillian looked out the door window and to the sky below and realized that there was only one thing she could do.
CHAPTER TWO
Almost a hundred miles away, and blasting in the opposite direction, sat a young freckle-faced woman with blond hair. She was holding a safebox that was given to her only a half hour earlier. The exchange was one of the most peculiar moments in Rebecca Badeau's life. She was standing at the railway platform, as she did every morning while on her way to work, when a woman holding the safebox approached her. The woman was a short, middle-aged, Seventh Tier caretaker with deep black hair and wearing a Ministry approved uniform, which consisted of a powder blue button-up top, matching slacks and a silver vest signifying her rank. Above her left breast was the embroidered shape of the Ministry seal. Rebecca recognized it instantly for she wore the same one above her left breast.
"Are you Rebecca Badeau?" asked the strange woman, her mouth licked dry.
"Who's asking?"
"Please pardon my intrusion at this early hour," said the woman apologetically. "I've been debating about coming here for two days. The old codger was insistent I do this despite how irrational it may be."
"Excuse me?" said Rebecca.
The woman sighed and then said: "I'm sorry. My name is Jillian Heddington, I work for Cognitive Services. A guest of mine wanted me to deliver something to you."
Rebecca reeled with surprise. Cognitive Services was a branch of the Dioceses of Social Affairs (DSA) and dealt specifically with the cognitively challenged as well as facilitated them. They had a long running reputation as being the caretakers of the world's social rejects. The majority of people who utilized their expertise were men and women who had succumb to mental illnesses or were born with mental defects. Rebecca couldn't recall anyone she was acquainted with using Cognitive Services. "What guest are you speaking of? I don't recall knowing anyone who uses Cognitive Services."
"Yes, I was aware of that," said Jillian and then paused nervously for a second, "aware that you didn't know my guest, I mean. He told me you wouldn't." She then looked anxiously around as if expecting someone else to arrive.
Rebecca felt confused. "What's this all about? Who was your guest?"
The nurse stopped and returned her attention. "See now, this is the whole problem. We aren't allowed to reveal who our guests are—or were in this case. All employees sign a confidentiality agreement that prevents our sharing of private information. It's designed to prevent our guests and their families from suffering any embarrassment or grief by outside knowledge of whatever circumstances they may encounter."
"So why are you here then?" asked Rebecca.
Jillian sighed again and walked toward her. "Because, my last guest was insistent that I bring this to you." She held up the safebox so there wouldn't be any confusion. "I would normally never do something like this—please understand that—but he . . . " she seemed to be searching for lost words, "he was kind of special to me. We had built a strong friendship these past nine years and I wanted to honor his last wishes."
Rebecca looked at the metallic safebox and its flat inconspicuous exterior. "He wanted you to bring me a safebox?"
Jillian shook her head. "There's more to it than this. Inside this box is something . . . well, something he wanted you to have."
"He wanted me to have it?" said Rebecca almost sounding appalled. "And you thought it was prudent to bring it to me?" Rebecca wasn't versed in the rules bestowed onto the workers of Cognitive Services but knew enough to know that delivering gifts from guests to strangers was highly unacceptable. The Ministry took a staunch stance on passing sensitive materials and information. "Ma'am, as a member of the Ministry I would expect more from you. We are charged with upholding the strictest discipline that would
be expected from none other than the Minister himself." A textbook response.
The woman looked surprised by the reaction. "I know and I'm terribly sorry to be bothering you, but if you'll hear me out I think you'll see why I'm here."
"I want you to tell me who this came from first," demanded Rebecca.
"Fine," said the caretaker, "but all of this needs to stay between the two of us if I'm to tell you." Jillian veered closer to her, as if to reveal a grand secret. "His name was Benjamin Vermil. Ever heard of him?"
Rebecca shook her head. "Not that I recall."
Jillian sighed again. "He said you would say that."
"Well how does he know who I am?" asked Rebecca.
"Good question. I don't know. As far as I know, he had never once left the facility or mentioned you before. I was certain he had gone delirious, that he had made you up in his head. He started mentioning your name four days before he died. He never said how he knew you and when I asked he told me I wouldn't understand. You see Ben was not like anyone else at Cognitive Services. He was . . . he was . . . special, but not in the chicken-brain way. He was unlike anyone I had ever met."
Rebecca didn't understand. "Why did he want you to give me this box?"
"During those last four days he revealed to me a secret that he said was the most important secret anyone had ever told. He then asked me to buy a safebox and to go out to the Eastern Plains, to a place where I would find what I now have stored inside here." Jillian then lifted the box so that there was no mistaking.
Rebecca was having a hard time getting past all of the infractions Jillian had committed. "Miss Heddington, I am shocked by how reckless your actions have been. As I've already said, you are a member of the Ministry. I find it hard to fathom how your superior would feel if he were to hear this confession let alone know that you approached a higher tiered member with such ridiculousness."
"I know, I know, and yet this is very important."
"I can't imagine what could be more important than the seriousness of these offenses," said Rebecca with judicial callousness.
Jillian sighed anxiously and looked around before speaking. "If you will let me finish. . . ."
Rebecca couldn't imagine what Jillian could say that would justify her breaking Ministry code. "My train leaves in five minutes. I suggest you make haste."
Jillian nodded and then held out the box. "I don't need five minutes, everything you need to know is right in here."
Rebecca eyed the safebox. "What did you find?"
"I don't really know what it is," confessed Jillian. "All Ben told me is that you would know what to do with it. He told me to place it in this box and give it to you with a warning not to give it to anyone else."
The situation was becoming more serious to Rebecca. "What's inside? I don't like the threatening tone of his message."
"I don't think it was intended to be a threat, Miss Badeau. I think it was meant to be a warning."
"Either way, it's hardly the kind of message a guest at Cognitive Services should be sending to a Fifth Tier member of the Ministry."
Jillian looked taken aback, as if the comment had struck a nerve with her. "You're not at all as Ben described."
"Excuse me," snapped Rebecca, not sure if she was just insulted.
Jillian extended out the safebox again. "Are you going to take it or not."
"Not until you tell me its contents."
"I already told you, I don't know what it is. Ben said you and you alone can understand it."
"Then what was this big secret he told you?"
Jillian hesitated for a few seconds. Apparently she was unsure how to tell Rebecca. "The secret isn't what's inside."
"What do you mean?"
Jillian nervously licked her lips. "The secret is how to open this safebox."
"What?" said Rebecca, confused. "The most important secret anyone had ever told is how to open a safebox?" Is she mad? Rebecca thought.
"No," said Jillian while shaking her head. "The secret is the password to the box."
"Oh . . ." said Rebecca, still not understanding how a password could be a great secret. "What's the password then?"
Jillian looked incredibly anxious. "I first want you to know that I truly have no idea how Ben knew this . . . if it is in fact true."
"Go on."
"Well . . . it's just that . . . I don't want you getting the wrong impression after I tell you," said Jillian and then nervously tapped her fingers on the box. "What I mean to say is that I haven't told a soul about this secret. After I tell you, the secret will never leave my lips again. It will travel with me to the grave."
"Then maybe it shouldn't be told," said Rebecca.
"I would agree with you if it weren't for the promise I made to Ben. He told me it was imperative to make it the password to this safebox. I can't explain to you why, only that he insisted that it be done this way." Jillian then handed over the safebox.
Rebecca took it with both hands and was surprised by the weight. "Pretty heavy." She couldn't imagine what could be inside let alone what could be so important that a fellow member of the Ministry would risk so much in order to pass it along. It doesn't matter, thought Rebecca. She was fully intending on taking it to the Ministry Security Force as soon as she had the opportunity. As a Fifth Tier member, it was Rebecca's duty to report such conduct. It was a loyalty to her government that was engrained in her personality at the earliest of age. Rebecca's father, Francis Sommers, had a mantra that he spoon fed his daughter: The Ministry first, family second, Collective third, and all else last. "And the password?"
Jillian trembled a bit before quickly blurting out: "It's the surname of your biological father."
At first Rebecca wasn't sure what Jillian had just said. "Excuse me? What was that?" But before Jillian had a chance to clarify, the words came together in Rebecca's mind. The surname of my biological father. Not her father, but her biological father. Rebecca blinked rapidly as her mind went blank.
Jillian's pale face opened a bit. "Like I told you before, I won't repeat it ever again."
Rebecca still didn't know what to say. The situation far exceeded serious. There were only three people in the world that knew who Rebecca's biological father was—Rebecca, her mother and the man himself. "That's impossible."
Jillian backed off a bit. "I'm sure it is and I don't want to pretend to understand it any further. Ben gave me a name and I made it the password—end of story. Whether or not you can open this box is between you and the recently deceased. I'm only here to pass on the message."
Rebecca was too in shock to say anything else.
"Goodbye Miss Badeau and good luck."
Rebecca watched Jillian walk over to one of the cars and step inside with a few others.
My biological father, thought Rebecca. A chill ran down her spine as she looked up at the giant portrait of the Minister hanging high above the station, smiling down on her as if silently saying: I'm watching you. This was a colossal problem. Whatever infractions Jillian had inflicted onto herself were nothing in comparison to what Rebecca would receive if anyone alerted the MSF of her secret. The most important secret ever told was damn right—at least to her.
CHAPTER THREE
The railway hummed through the green farmland on its way to the Capitol City of Sector 27. A faint form of the rolling, tree-covered Mazlo Mountains could be seen on the horizon. Rebecca sat looking out the floor-to-ceiling window, inside the air-conditioned railcar, biting the nails of her right hand while the safebox was held securely on her lap by her left hand. The timing couldn't have been worse. She was in the throes of marital preparation and was undergoing a thorough background check. Having something drummed up about her unknown biological father was downright dangerous. And now I'm almost late to work, which was the very last thing she needed to have happen that morning. In her five years at Historical Events – Sector 27, Rebecca had never been late. It was unthinkable. The Ministry had so meticulously planned out her day—ever
yone's day—that being late was completely irresponsible. The Ministry controlled everything. It had been that way long before Rebecca was born and she figured it would be that way long after she passed. They've controlled everything since The First Time—when the Ministry was first established. The First Time was the zero hour for The Collective. The Collective was a Ministry term used for the collections of communities and societies under its control. The First Time was the initial gathering of simple-minded hunters and gatherers who discovered that working as a united force was better for all: establishing the first farming system, the first food bank, the first city, and of course the first government. Over time, the Ministry created departmental silos, known as Dioceses, designed to improve the management of the different fields necessary to maintain The Collective. The Dioceses broke into four categories: Dioceses of Earthly Affairs (DEA), Dioceses of Cosmic Affairs (DCA), Dioceses of Technological Affairs (DTA) and the Dioceses of Social Affairs (DSA). The latter kept The Collective inline—the one that everyone feared. The Dioceses of Social Affairs housed the Ministry Security Force (MSF). They were responsible for policing all of the sectors in The Collective and they took their job quite seriously. Rebecca had heard frightening rumors about how the MSF operated: that they watched everything, that they silently took criminals away at night, stashing them in a secret prison in the south, where no one would see or hear from them again—that they could even read a person's thoughts. No one in The Collective crossed them. And now I have this on my hands, she thought.
Rebecca adjusted uneasily on the railway seat as unfamiliar faces packed in all around her. It was the late train. Had she been only one rank higher, Rebecca could have taken a hovercar instead of the heavily populated public transportation.
The railcar filled with a sweet scent freshener ejected by the Automatic Air Improver mounted above the seating. Rebecca sighed and reached up to push the bangs from her short haircut aside. It was a Ministry approved hairstyle for the workplace. Her front bangs were not allowed to go any further than the bottom of her nose. The back of her hair was not allowed to touch her shoulders. All single women wore this hairstyle. Only married women were allowed to have long hair. Rebecca didn't mind the shortness of the cut but she was anxious to grow it long. She had always envied women with long hair even though it was forbidden to envy. But her days of short hair were limited. She was three weeks away from being married to a Second Tier official's son: a man named Simon Wylde. His father, Arthur Wylde, was the Director of the Dioceses of Social Affairs. He was possibly the most powerful man in the world, next to the Minister. Most people, including Rebecca, wondered how a girl who tested into the Fifth Tier through the Cognitive Examination, a multi-section test that gauged a person's motor skills, intelligence, emotions, attractions and physicality, had been paired with a man whose stature was three tiers above her own. It was both exciting and frightening. Marrying up required a certain level of preparation that included an interview with a top official in the Ministry Security Force, which she had already been notified would be coming soon. Security interviews were supposedly the most comprehensive, in-depth examination of a person's life as well as family background. The anticipation of that interview alone added to her everyday stress-level, which she monitored with high frequency. Rebecca wondered how high her stress-level was that moment as she stroked the smooth metal finish of the safebox. She was very alarmed that someone knew who her biological father was. It could prove deadly for her.